Road Safety: Australia’s $29.7 Billion Car Crash

Australia’s peak motoring body has released a study showing road crashes cost the Australian economy almost $30 billion annually, and an accompanying list of federal policy interventions urgently needed to reduce deaths and injury.

Commissioned by the Australian Automobile Association (AAA), the new report: Cost of Road Trauma in Australia quantifies for the first time in almost a decade, the annual economy-wide cost of road crashes. It shows the costs of road trauma, mainly in the form of loss of life and well-being, vehicle damage, and disability care, represent a $29.7 billion drag on the national economy.

The report also for the first time details the cost of road crashes to government in the form of lost taxation, income support, and health and emergency services costs, which equate to a $3.7 billion annual burden upon Australian government budgets.

AAA Chief Executive Michael Bradley said: “More than 100 Australians are killed in car crashes every month and the same number are seriously injured every day, so the significance of this problem cannot be over-stated.

“The social cost of road deaths is both obvious and immeasurable, however the economic implications of Australia’s road safety crisis are not. The numbers we’re releasing today clearly demonstrate our current approach is neither effective nor proportionate, and that Australia needs an urgent response from our national government in the form of greater leadership and greater funding.”

The AAA has today also released its National Road Safety Platform to challenge the view that only state governments have a role to play in road safety. It identifies the federal levers able to address Australia’s worsening road safety crisis and recommends:

Improved data collection to identify the true extent and underlying causes of death and injury on Australia’s roads;

The re-establishment of the National Office for Road Safety to support best practice research and driver education;

The linking of federal road project funding to safety targets and project outcomes;

Reviewing data collected by first responders at crash scenes to ensure emerging trends, such as mobile phone use, are understood and consistently reported across jurisdictions;

Removing tariffs and other car industry protectionism to ensure Australians have improved access to safer cars;

Coordinated education programs (focusing upon national issues such as older drivers, international drivers, driver distraction, and the promotion of safer vehicles & new vehicle technologies); and,

Greater measurement and accountability relating to actions identified within the National Road Safety Strategy.

Australia’s National Road Safety Strategy, signed by all Australian governments in 2011, aims to reduce road deaths and injuries by at least 30 per cent by 2020. However the number of road fatalities is largely unchanged since 2011, while Australia remains unable to accurately quantify serious road injuries.

The AAA campaigned for and welcomed the Government’s establishment of a national inquiry into the National Road Safety Strategy, as announced in the 2017 Budget.

We use cookies to provide you with the best possible experience on our website. By continuing to use this site you consent to the use of cookies. You can find out more about the cookies we use and learn how to manage them in our Privacy Policy.

Want to stay in the loop?

Name*

FirstLast

Email*

Postcode*

Suburb

*

The AAA would like to send you occasional news, surveys and information relating to its products, services and events. To join our mailing list simply tick this box. You can unsubscribe at any time.